ADJECTIVE
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having or growing on or from a peduncle or stalk
a pedunculate flower
a pedunculate barnacle is attached to the substrate by a fleshy foot or stalk
How To Use pedunculate In A Sentence
- Cones indehiscent, from 9 to 14 cm. long, short-pedunculate, ovoid-conical or subcylindrical; apophyses dull pale nut-brown, rugose, shrinking much in drying and exposing the seeds, prolonged and tapering to a more or less reflexed tip, the umbo inconspicuous; seeds large, wingless, the spermoderm entire. The Genus Pinus
- Tubulovillous polyps are pedunculated, with villous projections extending from the free ends.
- If all pedunculated cirripedes had become extinct, and they have suffered far more extinction than have sessile cirripedes, who would ever have imagined that the branchiæ in this latter family had originally existed as organs for preventing the ova from being washed out of the sack? VI. Difficulties of the Theory. Modes of Transition
- a pedunculate barnacle is attached to the substrate by a fleshy foot or stalk
- Look at the common oak, how closely it has been studied; yet a German author makes more than a dozen species out of forms, which are almost universally considered by other botanists to be varieties; and in this country the highest botanical authorities and practical men can be quoted to show that the sessile and pedunculated oaks are either good and distinct species or mere varieties. II. Variation under Nature. Doubtful Species
- Cones symmetrical, from 4 to 7 cm. long, ovate-conic, short-pedunculate, early deciduous; apophyses sublustrous, nut-brown, flat or somewhat elevated, the umbo usually mutic. The Genus Pinus
- Small bundles of up to 5 pedunculate capitate inflorescences arise in axillary positions on the young parts of shoots. Chapter 16
- It may be single or multiple, pedunculated or sessile, and is liable to become malignant, especially when associated with leucoplakia. Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
- The pedunculated oak has its acorns borne upon a footstool. Glossary of the Principal Scientific Terms Used in the Present Volume
- Cones symmetrical, from 4 to 7 cm. long, ovate-conic, short-pedunculate, early deciduous; apophyses sublustrous, nut-brown, flat or somewhat elevated, the umbo usually mutic. The Genus Pinus